i dont know
Not exactly. Red giants become white dwarf stars. It is the red supergiants that can become supernovas.
Oops! Not all stars end up as a supernova. To become a Type 2 supernova, the star has to be between 8 and 50 times larger than the Sun.
When a star runs out of fuel, it can evolve into a red giant or a white dwarf, depending on its mass. Low to medium-mass stars (like our Sun) will expand and become red giants. High-mass stars will undergo a supernova explosion, leaving behind a dense core known as a white dwarf.
No. Only massive stars can become supergiants.
it is Supernova
Not exactly. Red giants become white dwarf stars. It is the red supergiants that can become supernovas.
No. Intermediate mass stars will evolve into Red Giants and then to White Dwarfs. See related questions for more information.
Oops! Not all stars end up as a supernova. To become a Type 2 supernova, the star has to be between 8 and 50 times larger than the Sun.
Blue stars expand to become red supergiants. This expansion occurs as they near the end of their life cycle and undergo changes in their core structure leading to increased size and brightness. Ultimately, blue stars can end their lives in a supernova explosion.
Actually if a star is medium or low mass is will run out of fuel and turn into a red giant, once the stars atmosphere slowly drifts away and the core is remaining it will eventually become a white dwarf For more massive stars it will turn in to a super giant the will cause a supernova, after the supernova the star can either a black hole or a neutron star
Most medium mass stars such as our Sun DO become red giants. Smaller stars do not have enough mass to initiate helium fusion when the hydrogen supply begins to run low, and do not become red giants.
They form a new star, or the might become a supernova......ouch
Only a very, very few stars have mass enough to become supernova. Jupiter is a planet not a star. It is far to small to become a star, let alone a supernova.
When a star runs out of fuel, it can evolve into a red giant or a white dwarf, depending on its mass. Low to medium-mass stars (like our Sun) will expand and become red giants. High-mass stars will undergo a supernova explosion, leaving behind a dense core known as a white dwarf.
No. Only massive stars can become supergiants.
If enough mass is left over after the supernova explosion, i.e. after material is blown off into space, the star will become a black hole. Less massive stars will become neutron stars. A neutron star can convert to a black hole later, if enough matter falls into it.
it is Supernova